What is in store for 2014 according to Foodservice Solutions®
Grocerant Guru “continue growth of Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared
food in ever expanding non-traditional points of distribution.
The team at Foodservice Solutions® has regularly defined the
Grocerant as an evolution of consumer, technology and convenience regularly at
presentations around the world and on this blog.
Harvey Hartman and his outstanding team at The Hartman Group
think it is growing so fast that it has now become disruptive to the food
retail sector. Here are Harvey Hartman’s
teams list of seven trends that
disrupted food culture in 2013:
- Snacks, the Modern Meal?
Consumers’ pursuit of snacks continues unabated. They now
account for more than half of all eating occasions, rendering the word itself
almost obsolete. What we used to think of as snacks—food eaten between
meals—has morphed into something so frequent and large that they are
practically meals themselves. People want healthy, less processed snacks that
are easy to carry, something food companies are still working to deliver.
- Social Media Disrupt Food
Culture
Sorry, Mom; you’ve been replaced as the go-to source for
culinary questions. People consult social media sites instead for cooking tips,
restaurant reviews and recipes (Allrecipes.com is a top-10 most used social
media site). They see friends post photographs of their meals on Facebook and text
family members with questions and grocery-shelf photos while they shop. Social
media amplify the power of personal recommendations, which now can reach
millions of people in a day.
- Online Grocery, Still Coming
The Internet shapes the way people grocery shop, showing them
dishes around the world without their having to leave home and demonstrating,
via food blogs and videos, how to cook those same foods. The part that has not
worked so far is online grocery shopping, and The Hartman Group’s research shows
54 percent of people online say they are not likely to buy food there.
Nevertheless, 2013 brought the long-awaited expansion of Amazon Fresh’s online
grocery business, and many other online food purveyors—from Relay Foods to Blue
Apron—have big followings.
- It’s Not About the Coffee
As McDonald’s tries to compete with Starbucks, selling espresso
drinks and talking about where it buys (“sources”) its coffee, Starbucks is
revamping its food case again, and Dunkin’ Donuts is expanding westward. Some
call these the “coffee wars,” but the war is actually for consumers’ hearts.
While Starbucks’ roast is dark and Dunkin’s is light, the people who align themselves
with each brand are attracted at least as much to the experience as to the
roast—and they transfer that loyalty to purchases of coffee beans on grocery shelves.
- Food Competition Everywhere
Consumers are likely to buy food almost anywhere now, from Ikea
to Costco Wholesale to a Manhattan steakhouse planned by Brooks Brothers. People no longer fit
their food needs around the hours and layouts of traditional grocery stores.
Their new shopping patterns stoke competition and allow them to grab snacks on
the go and assemble meals from food bought at multiple stores. Even when people
do plan a meal, they are just as likely to ditch their plan for a restaurant
craving, bringing every food source into the competitive arena.
- Beating Fast Food at Its Own
Game
Supermarkets that listen to their customers—Whole Foods,
Wegmans, H-E-B’s Central Market—offer fresh, healthy food that is easy to grab
on the go. Many outdo fast food at its own, make-it-while-you-wait game,
creating a bit of theater in the process. Diane Earle, senior director of
prepared foods at United Supermarkets in Texas, nailed it when she told Supermarket News that cooking in front of
customers enhances their perception that the food is fresh—precisely what
consumers want.
- Sustainability and the Good
Company
The Hartman Group has known for years that companies do not have
to be perfect for consumers to value their sustainability efforts, but they do
have to communicate. People continue to tell us that they want to know what
efforts are under way, from taking care of animals to reducing environmental
impacts, so they can feel good about what they’re buying—and sustainable
purchasing typically starts with food.
Since 1991 retail
food consultancy Foodservice Solutions® of Tacoma, WA has been the global leader
in the Grocerant niche. Visit: www.FoodserviceSolutions.us for more information.
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